'' over a Hezhengia carcass
Predatory behavior Dinocrocuta was an exceptionally powerful predator and scavenger, capable of preying on animals much larger than itself, such as
giraffid,
rhinoceros, and occasionally
proboscideans. Though it is currently unknown if
Dinocrocuta was solitary or gregarious, it was probably a hunter of herbivores such as the tusked rhinoceros
Chilotherium.
Chilotherium, despite its great size, was vulnerable to the giant feliform, particularly when a pregnant female was giving birth, or was injured or sick. A skull and jaw from a female
Chilotherium bears the distinctive bite marks on the forehead from a
Dinocrocuta teeth, indicating that the rhino was part of the carnivore's diet. The regrowth of bone on the rhino's injuries also indicate that the
Dinocrocuta attempt at predation failed and that the rhinoceros fought off her attacker, managing to escape and heal. Like living spotted hyenas,
Dinocrocuta is thought to have been a bonecracker using its teeth in combination with its powerful jaws, though the teeth also show adaptations to cutting flesh. ==References==